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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore

The Metropolitan Archdiocese of Baltimore (Latin: Archidiœcesis Baltimorensis) is the archdiocese of the Latin Church of the Catholic Church in northern and western Maryland in the United States. It is the metropolitan see of the Ecclesiastical Province of Baltimore.

Archdiocese of Baltimore

Archidiœcesis Baltimorensis
Baltimore Metropolitan Cathedral
Coat of arms
Location
Country United States
TerritoryThe City of Baltimore and nine counties across central and western Maryland
Ecclesiastical provinceBaltimore
Statistics
Area12,340 km2 (4,760 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2020)
3,304,588
525,500 ( 15.9%)
Parishes144
Information
DenominationCatholic
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
EstablishedNovember 6, 1789; 234 years ago (1789-11-06)
CathedralCathedral of Mary Our Queen
Co-cathedralBasilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Patron saintImmaculate Conception[citation needed]
St. Ignatius of Loyola[1]
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArchbishopWilliam E. Lori
Auxiliary BishopsAdam J. Parker
Bruce Lewandowski
Bishops emeritusEdwin Frederick O'Brien
Denis J. Madden
Map
Website
www.archbalt.org

The Archdiocese of Baltimore is the oldest archdiocese in the United States. The Vatican granted the archbishop of Baltimore the right of precedence in the nation at liturgies, meetings, and Plenary Councils in 1859.[2] It is the premier episcopal see of the Catholic Church in the United States of America, as "prerogative of place".

As of 2020, the archdiocese had an estimated Catholic population of 525,000 with 198 diocesan priests, 193 religious priests and 169 permanent deacons in 139 parishes.

The Archdiocese of Baltimore has two major seminaries: St. Mary's Seminary and University in Baltimore and Mount St. Mary's Seminary in Emmitsburg.[3][4]

It was revealed in late 2016 that the Archdiocese of Baltimore had paid off numerous settlements since 2011 for abuse victims.[5]

Territory edit

The Archdiocese of Baltimore comprises the City of Baltimore and nine Maryland counties:

Allegany, Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Frederick, GarrettHarford, Howard, and Washington.

History edit

1600 to 1700 edit

The first Catholic presence in the original British colonies in America was the proprietary colony of Maryland, established by Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore in 1634. A Catholic himself, Calvert intended the colony to be open to English Catholics facing persecution at home.

In 1689, members of the growing Puritan population in Maryland staged a takeover of the colonial government and effectively outlawed Catholicism.[6][7] In 1691, alarmed at the violent conflicts in Maryland, the British Crown took over the colony from the Calvert family.

1700 to 1789 edit

The new royal governor in Maryland imposed less sweeping restrictions on Catholics than those of the Puritan regime. These restrictions would stay in place until after the end of the American Revolution.

During the British colonial period, the small Catholic communities in the American colonies were under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Apostolic Vicariate of the London District in England.[8] The first Catholic church in Baltimore, St. Peter's, was dedicated in 1770.[9]

In November 1783, after the end of the Revolution, the Catholic clergy in Maryland petitioned the Vatican for permission to nominate a priest as superior of the missions for the United States. The superior would have some of the powers of a bishop and be in charge of the American Catholic Church. After receiving papal approval, the clergy nominated Reverend John Carroll to become superior. Pope Pius VI in June 1784 confirmed Carroll as superior of the missions. This papal act established an American hierarchy, removing the American Catholic Church from the authority of the British Catholic Church

In November 1784, Pius VI erected the Prefecture Apostolic of the United States encompassing the entire country. Since Maryland had the largest Catholic population, Pope Pius VI placed the prefecture see in Baltimore and appointed Carroll as its first prefect apostolic.

1789 to 1800 edit

Four years later, Pius VI elevated the prefecture into the Diocese of Baltimore, making it the first diocese solely within the United States.[10] St. Peter's, the only Catholic church in Baltimore, was designated as the pro-cathedral (temporary cathedral). The new Diocese of Baltimore covered the entire nation.

To train priests for his new diocese, Carroll asked the Fathers of the Company of Saint Sulpice to come to Baltimore. They arrived in 1791 and started the nucleus of St. Mary's College and Seminary in that city.[11] Also in 1791, Carroll convened the first diocesan synod in the United States. Twenty-two priests attended the synod, setting national policies for baptism, confirmation, penance, the celebration of the liturgy in the mass, anointing of the sick, and mixed marriages.[12]

The Vatican in 1795 appointed Reverend Leonard Neale as coadjutor bishop in Baltimore to assist Carroll.[13] In 1798, Carroll won a civil case in Pennsylvania that acknowledged his position as leader of the American church.[11] Carroll gave his approval to the founding of the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary, who in 1799 established Visitation Academy in Georgetown.[14][15]

1800 to 1821 edit

Carroll ordained the first American-born Catholic priest, Reverend William Matthews, at St. Peter's Pro-Cathedral in Baltimore in 1800.[16] In 1806, Carroll started construction of the Cathedral of the Assumption in Baltimore[17] As the Catholic population of the United States grew, the Vatican saw the need to create more dioceses. In 1808, Pope Pius VII erected four new dioceses from what now became the Archdiocese of Baltimore. The pope named Carroll as the first archbishop of Baltimore.[10]

Name of new diocese Territory taken from archdiocese in 1808
Diocese of Boston Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Vermont
Diocese of New York State of New York and seven counties from New Jersey
Diocese of Philadelphia Pennsylvania, Delaware, and seven counties from New Jersey
Diocese of Bardstown Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, and the Old Northwest Territory

After Carroll died in 1815, Neale automatically succeed him as archbishop of Baltimore. However, due to Neale's bad health, Pope Pius VII in 1816 appointed Reverend Ambrose Maréchal as coadjutor archbishop. When Neale died in 1817, Maréchal succeeded him as archbishop of Baltimore.[13][18]

Maréchal believed that his most pressing problem was a shortage of priests. It was aggravated by parish trustees who thought they had the power to assign these priests.[19] In some Irish parishes, the trustees would demand Irish priests, even if they were not qualified.[20] In 1820, Bishop Flaget of Bardstown warned Maréchal about a man claiming to be a priest who wanted to practice in the archdiocese. This individual produced positive letters of introduction from his bishop. However, when he was observed celebrating mass, it became clear that the so-called priest was incompetent. Maréchal later advised the Propaganda Fide (now the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples) in Rome about this problem.[21]

1821 to 1850 edit

Maréchal dedicated the completed Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Cathedral in May 1821.[18] Later in 1821, Maréchal went to Rome on archdiocese business. One problem he had faced in Maryland was the disputed ownership of the White Marsh plantation in Bowie. The Order of Jesus had received the plantation as a gift in 1728 and claimed it as their property. Maréchal said that the plantation actually belonged to the archdiocese. The Vatican gave the archdiocese ownership of White Marsh.[22][18]

On January 8, 1828, Reverend James Whitfield of Baltimore was appointed coadjutor archbishop of the archdiocese by Pope Leo XII. Before Whitfield could be consecrated as coadjutor, Maréchal died on January 29, 1828. Whitfield was finally consecrated as archbishop in June 1828.[23] He convened a synod for the diocesan clergy in 1831 and the Second Provincial Council of Baltimore in 1833.[24] Throughout his tenure, Whitfield worked for the welfare of the African American community.[24] He authorized the foundation of the Oblate Sisters of Providence, the first religious order of African-American women in the United States. Whitfield talked about how he would have liked to evangelize the hundreds of thousands of enslaved African-Americans in Virginia.[25]

Pope Gregory XVI in March 1834 appointed Reverend Samuel Eccleston as coadjutor archbishop to assist Whitfield. When Whitfield died in October 1834, Eccleston automatically succeeded him as archbishop.[26] Eccleston encouraged religious orders to establish mother houses in his diocese, particularly those orders that could provide social services to the growing number of Catholic immigrants in the industrializing cities. The Sisters of the Visitation increased the number of their academies in the city and the archdiocese, the Brothers of St. Patrick opened a trade school near Baltimore, and the Redemptorists provided services for German-speaking immigrants. The Brothers of the Christian Schools founded Calvert Hall School in 1845 in Baltimore.

In 1847, Eccleston was planning to disband the Oblate Sisters of Providence, but was dissuaded by Redemptorist Father Thaddeus Anwander.[27] St. Charles College was established in 1848 in Howard County on land donated by the planter Charles Carroll.[28] Between 1837 and 1849, Eccleston held five provincial councils in Baltimore.[29] He also started several new parishes during his administration.[30] Eccleston died in 1851.

1850 to 1866 edit

The Vatican continued to erect new dioceses and vicariates out of the Archdiocese of Baltimore through the 19th century as the church evolved and grew in the United States.[31]

Name of new diocese Date of new diocese Territory taken from archdiocese
Diocese of Charleston 1820 North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia
Diocese of Richmond 1820 Most of Virginia
Vicariate Apostolic of Mississippi and Alabama 1822 Mississippi and Alabama
Vicariate Apostolic of the Oregon Territory[31] 1843 From California to Alaska and from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean
Diocese of Richmond 1858 City of Alexandria
Diocese of Wilmington 1868 Delaware and the remaining Virginia counties

Following the death of Eccleston, Bishop Francis Kenrick of Philadelphia was named the sixth archbishop of Baltimore by Pope Pius IX in 1851.[32] He presided over the First Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1852.[33] As archbishop, Kenrick expanded parochial schools throughout the archdiocese. Under his tenure, parochial schools were free for all students, and were supported directly by the parishes.[34] Kenrick died in 1863. The next archbishop of Baltimore was Bishop Martin Spalding from the Diocese of Louisville, appointed by Pope Pius IX.[35]

1866 to 1900 edit

In 1866, Spalding founded St. Mary's Industrial School in Baltimore, a boys reformatory.[36][37] Spalding conducted a visitation of the archdiocese, during which he reportedly administered confirmation to 8,000 people.[38] Spalding recruited priests for the archdiocese from All Hallows College in Ireland and the American College at Louvain in Belgium[30] He also organized the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul as well as the Association of St. Joseph, a society for the care of impoverished girls.[39]

After the end of the American Civil War in 1865, Spalding raised $10,000 in the archdiocese for relief efforts in the former Confederate States of America. He also took a special interest in the spiritual welfare of the African-Americans who had just been freed from slavery. Writing to Archbishop John McCloskey, Spalding said, "Four million of these unfortunates are thrown on our charity, and they silently but eloquently appeal to us for help."[36] He invited Reverend Herbert Vaughan and the Mill Hill Fathers from England to minister exclusively among freedmen. In October 1866, Spalding presided over the Second Plenary Council of Baltimore.[39][40]

After Spalding died in 1871, Pius IX appointed bishop James Bayley from the Diocese of Newark as the next archbishop of Baltimore in 1872.[41] He convened the Eighth Provincial Synod in 1875 and enacted new regulations on clerical dress, mixed marriages, and church music. Bayley consecrated the cathedral in 1876 and retired a large amount of archdiocesan debt. In May 1877, Pius IX selected Bishop James Gibbons of Richmond as coadjutor archbishop to assist the sick Bayley. After Bayley died in October 1877, Gibbons succeeded him as archbishop of Baltimore.[42] In 1884, Gibbons founded the House of the Good Shepherd in Baltimore, a reformatory for female criminals.[43]

1900 to 1940 edit

After the end of World War I in 1919, Gibbons supported American participation in the new League of Nations. He was initially opposed to the women's suffrage movement in the United States. However, when the nineteenth amendment to the US Constitution passed in 1920, allowing women to vote, Gibbons urged women to exercise that right, describing it "...not only as a right but as a strict social duty."[44] Gibbons died in 1921

Bishop Michael Curley of the Diocese of Saint Augustine was the next archbishop of Baltimore, named by Pope Benedict XV in 1921.[45] His arrival in his new city was described in the press as "one of the greatest welcomes ever tendered a new citizen of Baltimore."[46] During his tenure in Baltimore, Curley established 66 schools, placing the importance of constructing schools over churches.[47] In 1926, he declared, "I defy any system of grammar school education in the United States to prove itself superior to the system that is being maintained in the Archdiocese of Baltimore."[48] He also established diocesan offices for Catholic Charities in 1923 and for the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in 1925.[48]

In 1939, Pope Pius XII erected the Archdiocese of Washington, taking the District of Columbia and five nearby Maryland counties from the Archdiocese of Baltimore.[49] The pope selected Curley to serve as archbishop of Washington. The two archdioceses now shared the same archbishop.[50] Curley used the title of Archbishop of Baltimore-Washington during this period, although the two archdioceses were separate entities.[51]

1940 to 1989 edit

After Curley died in 1947, Pius XII appointed Monsignor Patrick A. O'Boyle as archbishop of Washington and Bishop Francis Keough of the Diocese of Providence as archbishop of Baltimore.[49][50] During the 14 years of Keough's administration, the Catholic population of the archdiocese grew from 265,000 to 400,000. Keough dedicated the new Cathedral of Mary Our Queen in Baltimore in 1959; he also built many new schools, homes, and orphanages.[52]

In July 1961, Pope John XXIII named Bishop Lawrence Shehan of the Diocese of Bridgeport to assist Keough as coadjutor archbishop. When Keough died in December 1961, Shehan automatically succeeded him as archbishop of Baltimore.[53] Shehan was a strong supporter of the American Civil Rights movement. He banned racial segregation in all of the archdiocesan institutions in 1962[54] and participated in the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.[55] Shehan also maintained good relations with the Jewish and Eastern Orthodox communities in the archdiocese.[55] Shehan worked with his friend Harry Lee Doll, Episcopal Bishop of Maryland, on both civil rights and ecumenical issues. Along with the president of St. Mary's Seminary and University, Shehan and Doll in 1968 founded the Ecumenical Institute at St. Mary's.[56]

Following Shehan's retirement in 1974, Pope Paul VI named Bishop William Borders of the Diocese of Orlando as the 13th archbishop of Baltimore that same year.[57]

During his 15-year tenure in Baltimore, Borders divided the archdiocese into three vicariates and appointed his auxiliary bishops as vicars over them. He reorganized the Archdiocesan Central Services, naming cabinet-level secretaries to carry out the administrative work of the archdiocese.[58] Borders clarified and strengthened the role of the archdiocesan pastoral council, and combined the board of consultors and the priests senate to form the priests' council.[59] He initiated a Department of Pastoral Planning and Management, an Office of Fund Development and an evangelization effort.[58] Instead of residing at an apartment at the Basilica of the Assumption, Borders lived alone at the former sexton's lodge.[60][61] Borders became what Baltimore Magazine called the "king of the soup kitchens". While he was archbishop, the budget for Catholic Charities grew from $2.5 million a year to $33 million a year, and its staff expanded from 200 to over 1,000.[62] Borders retired in 1989.

1989 to present edit

Pope John Paul II appointed Bishop William H. Keeler from the Diocese of Harrisburg as the next archbishop of Baltimore in 1989.[63] Keeler was responsible for the restoration of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.[64]

After Keeler retired in 2006, John Paul II replaced him with Archbishop Edwin O'Brien from the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA.[65] In 2008, O'Brien dedicated the Pope John Paul II Prayer Garden in Baltimore, which he called a "sanctuary in a suffering city."[66] In 2011, he became grand master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem in Rome.

In 2012, Bishop William E. Lori of Bridgeport was appointed archbishop of Baltimore by Pope Benedict XVI. In 2019, Lori released “The Journey to Racial Justice: Repentance, Healing and Action.” The document acknowledged racism in the Catholic Church and suggested measures to combat it. That same year, Lori instituted an initiative for reporting allegations against any bishop in the archdiocese. The policy was drafted by the archdiocesan independent review board.

As of 2023, Lori is the current archbishop of Baltimore.

Plenary councils of Baltimore edit

The Plenary Councils of Baltimore were three national meetings of American Catholic bishops in the 19th century.

  • First Plenary Council (1852) – The First Council published a decree requiring priests immigrating to the United States to provide letters of reference from their previous bishops before they could practise ministry in this country. The council also passed a requirement that Catholic engaged couples publish marriage banns.
  • Second Plenary Council (1866) – The Second Council advocated the churching of women, a ceremony blessing women after childbirth, and setting age 10 as the age for first communion.
  • Third Plenary Council (1884) – The Third Council set six holy days of obligation for Catholics and appointed a commission to draft a catechism.

Sexual abuse edit

In July 1995, John Merzbacher, a teacher at Catholic Community Middle School in south Baltimore, received four life sentences after being convicted of raping Elizabeth Ann Murphy at the school in the 1970s.[67] At the time, prosecutors also found evidence that Marzbacher sexually abused 13 other male and female students when he taught there.[68][67] Merzbacher died in prison in May 2023.[68]

In 2016, the archdiocese confirmed that it had paid a total of $472,000 to settlements to 16 former students of Archbishop Keough High School. The plaintiffs claimed to have been sexually abused as children by Reverend A. Joseph Maskell from 1967 to 1975.[69][70][71] After the archdiocese removed Maskell from ministry in 1994, he fled to Ireland.[72] He was never charged with any crimes."[73]

The archdiocese was featured in the 2017 Netflix documentary The Keepers, investigated sexual abuse by clergy at Archbishop Keough High School and the murder of Sister Catherine Cesnik in 1969.

A report released by Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro in August 2018, singled out Cardinal William Keeler for criticism. When Keeler was archbishop of Baltimore, he allowed Reverend Arthur Long to transfer from the Diocese of Harrisburg to the Archdiocese of Baltimore.[74] Long had been accused of sexually abusing children during his time in Harrisburg when Keeler was bishop there .[74][75] After the grand jury report was released, the archdiocese canceled plans to named a new elementary school after Keeler.[76]

In February 2019, Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh launched an investigation into sexual abuse allegations against the archdiocese.[77] Archbishop Lori provided Frosh with over 50,000 pages of internal documents dating back to 1965.[78]

In March 2019, Lori banned former Auxiliary Bishop Gordon Bennett, then residing in the archdiocese, from practicing any form of ministry in the archdiocese or the suffragan Diocese of Wheeling–Charleston. Bennett had been accused of sexual abuse in 2006.[79][80][81] In April 2019, the archdiocese added the names of 23 deceased clergy to a list of accused clergy which the archdiocese published in 2002.[82][83] Long, a Jesuit, was among those added to the list.[82][83]

The State of Maryland investigation concluded in November 2022,[84] and its report was released in April 2023.[85][86][68] The report named 156 archdiocesan employees and clergy as having credible accusations of sexually abusing more that 600 children between 1940 and 2002.[85][68][87] At the same time as the release of the report, the Maryland General Assembly passed a bill to end a statute of limitations on abuse-related civil lawsuits.[88] This bill was signed into law by Governor Wes Moore in April 2023.[89]

On September 29, 2023, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore in the US filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy to evade large anticipated financial losses in upcoming lawsuits permitted by the Maryland Child Victims Act starting on October 1.[90][91][92][93]

Episcopate edit

Prerogative of place edit

In 1858, the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith (Propaganda Fide), with the approval of Pius IX, conferred "Prerogative of Place" on the Archdiocese of Baltimore. This decree gave the archbishop of Baltimore precedence over all other American archbishops in councils, gatherings, and meetings. It did not matter if another archbishop had been elevated sooner or had been serving long. However, a cardinal still had precedence over the archbishop of Baltimore.[15]

Cathedrals edit

The first cathedral for the archdiocese was St. Peter's Pro-Cathedral, which is no longer standing. Today, unlike all other archdioceses in the United States, the Archdiocese of Baltimore has two cathedrals, both in Baltimore: the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.[94] The archbishop is considered the pastor of both co-cathedrals, appointing rectors to operate them.

St. Peter's Pro-Cathedral edit

St. Peters served as the base for the archbishop of Baltimore from 1790 to 1821. Since it never met the physical criteria for a proper cathedral and was always considered temporary, St. Peter's was termed a pro-cathedral. The building was razed in 1841.

Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary edit

Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary was constructed between 1806 and 1821. It was the first cathedral in the newly independent United States and is considered the mother church of the country. It is a co-cathedral of the archdiocese.

Cathedral of Mary Our Queen edit

Mary Our Queen was started in 1954 and completed in 1959. It is a co-cathedral of the archdiocese.

Bishops edit

 
Bishop Carroll lays the cornerstone in 1806 for the Cathedral of the Assumption on Cathedral Hill in Baltimore.

Prefect Apostolic of the United States edit

John Carroll (1784–1789), appointed first diocesan bishop with erection of diocese[95]

Bishop of Baltimore edit

John Carroll (1789–1808), elevated to Archbishop[95]

Archbishops of Baltimore edit

  1. John Carroll (1808–1815)
  2. Leonard Neale (1815–1817; coadjutor archbishop 1795–1815)
  3. Ambrose Maréchal (1817–1828)
  4. James Whitfield (1828–1834; coadjutor archbishop 1828)
  5. Samuel Eccleston (1834–1851; coadjutor archbishop 1834)
  6. Francis Patrick Kenrick (1851–1863)
  7. Martin John Spalding (1864–1872)
  8. James Roosevelt Bayley (1872–1877)
  9. James Gibbons (1877–1921) (Cardinal in 1886)
  10. Michael Joseph Curley (1921–1947)
  11. Francis Patrick Keough (1947–1961)
  12. Lawrence Shehan (1961–1974; coadjutor archbishop 1961) (Cardinal in 1965)
  13. William Donald Borders (1974–1989)
  14. William Henry Keeler (1989–2007) (Cardinal in 1994)
  15. Edwin Frederick O'Brien (2007–2011), appointed Grand Master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre (Cardinal in 2012)
  16. William Edward Lori (2012–present)[95]

Current auxiliary bishops edit

Former auxiliary bishops edit

Other diocesan priests who became bishops edit

Priests appointed, but never ordained, as bishops edit

Dominic Laurence Grässel appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Baltimore in 1793 but the notice arrived after his death

Notable individuals edit

  • Sister Elizabeth Ann Seton - Seton founded the first American congregation of religious sisters, the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph, in Emmitsburg, Maryland, in 1809. A year later, she opened the first free Catholic school for girls in the United States.[96] In 1975, Seton became the first American-born person to be canonized a saint.
  • Mother Mary Lange - Lange opened a free school in her Baltimore home for African American children who were denied access to other schools in the city. In 1828, Lange founded the Oblate Sisters of Providence, the first sustained religious order for African American women in the United States. She also opened what would later become St. Frances Academy, the first Catholic School for African-American children in the United States. In 1991, the Catholic Church opened a cause of sainthood for Lange, naming her a "servant of God."[97]

Education edit

As of 2023, the Archdiocese of Baltimore had 40 elementary and middle schools and 18 high schools with a total student enrollment of approximately 24,000.[98]

High schools edit

School Location Gender Diocesan or independent
Archbishop Curley High School Baltimore Boys Diocesan
Archbishop Spalding High School Severn Coed Diocesan
Bishop Walsh School Cumberland Coed Diocesan
Calvert Hall College Baltimore / Towson Boys Independent
Cristo Rey Jesuit High School Baltimore Coed Independent
Loyola Blakefield Baltimore / Towson Boys Independent
Maryvale Preparatory School Brooklandville Girls Independent
Mercy High School Baltimore Girls Independent
Mount de Sales Academy Baltimore / Catonsville Girls Independent
Mount Saint Joseph College Baltimore / Irvington Boys Independent
Notre Dame Preparatory School Baltimore / Towson Girls Independent
Our Lady of Mount Carmel High School Baltimore Coed Diocesan
St. Frances Academy Baltimore Coed Diocesan
St. John's Catholic Preparatory Buckeystown/ Frederick County Coed Independent
St. Maria Goretti High School Hagerstown Coed Diocesan
St. Mary's High School Annapolis Coed Diocesan
The Catholic High School of Baltimore Baltimore Girls Independent
The John Carroll School Bel Air Coed Independent

Churches edit

Media edit

The archdiocese began to publish its diocesan newspaper, The Baltimore Catholic Review in 1913 as the successor to the earlier diocesan publication The Catholic Mirror, published 1833 to 1908. The name has since been shortened to The Catholic Review. It changed from weekly to biweekly publication in 2012 and transformed again to a monthly magazine in December 2015.[101]

Ecclesiastical province edit

When the Archdiocese of Baltimore was erected in 1808, its ecclesiastical province covered the entire nation. In 1847, with the erected of the Archdiocese of St. Louis, the ecclesiastical province of Baltimore shrank.[15] It shrank again with the creation of the Archdioceses of Cincinnati, New Orleans, New York, and the Portland in Oregon in 1850. The province currently contains the following suffragan dioceses:

 
Ecclesiastical province of Baltimore

See also edit

References edit

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roman, catholic, archdiocese, baltimore, metropolitan, archdiocese, baltimore, latin, archidiœcesis, baltimorensis, archdiocese, latin, church, catholic, church, northern, western, maryland, united, states, metropolitan, ecclesiastical, province, baltimore, ar. The Metropolitan Archdiocese of Baltimore Latin Archidiœcesis Baltimorensis is the archdiocese of the Latin Church of the Catholic Church in northern and western Maryland in the United States It is the metropolitan see of the Ecclesiastical Province of Baltimore Archdiocese of BaltimoreArchidiœcesis BaltimorensisBaltimore Metropolitan CathedralCoat of armsLocationCountry United StatesTerritoryThe City of Baltimore and nine counties across central and western MarylandEcclesiastical provinceBaltimoreStatisticsArea12 340 km2 4 760 sq mi Population Total Catholics as of 2020 3 304 588 525 500 15 9 Parishes144InformationDenominationCatholicSui iuris churchLatin ChurchRiteRoman RiteEstablishedNovember 6 1789 234 years ago 1789 11 06 CathedralCathedral of Mary Our QueenCo cathedralBasilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin MaryPatron saintImmaculate Conception citation needed St Ignatius of Loyola 1 Current leadershipPopeFrancisArchbishopWilliam E LoriAuxiliary BishopsAdam J ParkerBruce LewandowskiBishops emeritusEdwin Frederick O BrienDenis J MaddenMapWebsitewww wbr archbalt wbr orgThe Archdiocese of Baltimore is the oldest archdiocese in the United States The Vatican granted the archbishop of Baltimore the right of precedence in the nation at liturgies meetings and Plenary Councils in 1859 2 It is the premier episcopal see of the Catholic Church in the United States of America as prerogative of place As of 2020 the archdiocese had an estimated Catholic population of 525 000 with 198 diocesan priests 193 religious priests and 169 permanent deacons in 139 parishes The Archdiocese of Baltimore has two major seminaries St Mary s Seminary and University in Baltimore and Mount St Mary s Seminary in Emmitsburg 3 4 It was revealed in late 2016 that the Archdiocese of Baltimore had paid off numerous settlements since 2011 for abuse victims 5 Contents 1 Territory 2 History 2 1 1600 to 1700 2 2 1700 to 1789 2 3 1789 to 1800 2 4 1800 to 1821 2 5 1821 to 1850 2 6 1850 to 1866 2 7 1866 to 1900 2 8 1900 to 1940 2 9 1940 to 1989 2 10 1989 to present 2 11 Plenary councils of Baltimore 2 12 Sexual abuse 3 Episcopate 3 1 Prerogative of place 3 2 Cathedrals 3 2 1 St Peter s Pro Cathedral 3 2 2 Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary 3 2 3 Cathedral of Mary Our Queen 4 Bishops 4 1 Prefect Apostolic of the United States 4 2 Bishop of Baltimore 4 3 Archbishops of Baltimore 4 4 Current auxiliary bishops 4 5 Former auxiliary bishops 4 6 Other diocesan priests who became bishops 4 7 Priests appointed but never ordained as bishops 5 Notable individuals 6 Education 6 1 High schools 7 Churches 8 Media 9 Ecclesiastical province 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksTerritory editThe Archdiocese of Baltimore comprises the City of Baltimore and nine Maryland counties Allegany Anne Arundel Baltimore Carroll Frederick Garrett Harford Howard and Washington History edit1600 to 1700 edit The first Catholic presence in the original British colonies in America was the proprietary colony of Maryland established by Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore in 1634 A Catholic himself Calvert intended the colony to be open to English Catholics facing persecution at home In 1689 members of the growing Puritan population in Maryland staged a takeover of the colonial government and effectively outlawed Catholicism 6 7 In 1691 alarmed at the violent conflicts in Maryland the British Crown took over the colony from the Calvert family 1700 to 1789 edit See also Protestant Revolution Maryland History of Roman Catholicism in the United States Colonial era History of Roman Catholicism in the United States English colonies and History of Roman Catholicism in the United States American Revolution The new royal governor in Maryland imposed less sweeping restrictions on Catholics than those of the Puritan regime These restrictions would stay in place until after the end of the American Revolution During the British colonial period the small Catholic communities in the American colonies were under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Apostolic Vicariate of the London District in England 8 The first Catholic church in Baltimore St Peter s was dedicated in 1770 9 In November 1783 after the end of the Revolution the Catholic clergy in Maryland petitioned the Vatican for permission to nominate a priest as superior of the missions for the United States The superior would have some of the powers of a bishop and be in charge of the American Catholic Church After receiving papal approval the clergy nominated Reverend John Carroll to become superior Pope Pius VI in June 1784 confirmed Carroll as superior of the missions This papal act established an American hierarchy removing the American Catholic Church from the authority of the British Catholic ChurchIn November 1784 Pius VI erected the Prefecture Apostolic of the United States encompassing the entire country Since Maryland had the largest Catholic population Pope Pius VI placed the prefecture see in Baltimore and appointed Carroll as its first prefect apostolic 1789 to 1800 edit Four years later Pius VI elevated the prefecture into the Diocese of Baltimore making it the first diocese solely within the United States 10 St Peter s the only Catholic church in Baltimore was designated as the pro cathedral temporary cathedral The new Diocese of Baltimore covered the entire nation To train priests for his new diocese Carroll asked the Fathers of the Company of Saint Sulpice to come to Baltimore They arrived in 1791 and started the nucleus of St Mary s College and Seminary in that city 11 Also in 1791 Carroll convened the first diocesan synod in the United States Twenty two priests attended the synod setting national policies for baptism confirmation penance the celebration of the liturgy in the mass anointing of the sick and mixed marriages 12 The Vatican in 1795 appointed Reverend Leonard Neale as coadjutor bishop in Baltimore to assist Carroll 13 In 1798 Carroll won a civil case in Pennsylvania that acknowledged his position as leader of the American church 11 Carroll gave his approval to the founding of the Order of the Visitation of Holy Mary who in 1799 established Visitation Academy in Georgetown 14 15 1800 to 1821 edit Carroll ordained the first American born Catholic priest Reverend William Matthews at St Peter s Pro Cathedral in Baltimore in 1800 16 In 1806 Carroll started construction of the Cathedral of the Assumption in Baltimore 17 As the Catholic population of the United States grew the Vatican saw the need to create more dioceses In 1808 Pope Pius VII erected four new dioceses from what now became the Archdiocese of Baltimore The pope named Carroll as the first archbishop of Baltimore 10 Name of new diocese Territory taken from archdiocese in 1808Diocese of Boston Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island Connecticut and VermontDiocese of New York State of New York and seven counties from New JerseyDiocese of Philadelphia Pennsylvania Delaware and seven counties from New JerseyDiocese of Bardstown Kentucky Tennessee Ohio and the Old Northwest TerritoryAfter Carroll died in 1815 Neale automatically succeed him as archbishop of Baltimore However due to Neale s bad health Pope Pius VII in 1816 appointed Reverend Ambrose Marechal as coadjutor archbishop When Neale died in 1817 Marechal succeeded him as archbishop of Baltimore 13 18 Marechal believed that his most pressing problem was a shortage of priests It was aggravated by parish trustees who thought they had the power to assign these priests 19 In some Irish parishes the trustees would demand Irish priests even if they were not qualified 20 In 1820 Bishop Flaget of Bardstown warned Marechal about a man claiming to be a priest who wanted to practice in the archdiocese This individual produced positive letters of introduction from his bishop However when he was observed celebrating mass it became clear that the so called priest was incompetent Marechal later advised the Propaganda Fide now the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples in Rome about this problem 21 1821 to 1850 edit Marechal dedicated the completed Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Cathedral in May 1821 18 Later in 1821 Marechal went to Rome on archdiocese business One problem he had faced in Maryland was the disputed ownership of the White Marsh plantation in Bowie The Order of Jesus had received the plantation as a gift in 1728 and claimed it as their property Marechal said that the plantation actually belonged to the archdiocese The Vatican gave the archdiocese ownership of White Marsh 22 18 On January 8 1828 Reverend James Whitfield of Baltimore was appointed coadjutor archbishop of the archdiocese by Pope Leo XII Before Whitfield could be consecrated as coadjutor Marechal died on January 29 1828 Whitfield was finally consecrated as archbishop in June 1828 23 He convened a synod for the diocesan clergy in 1831 and the Second Provincial Council of Baltimore in 1833 24 Throughout his tenure Whitfield worked for the welfare of the African American community 24 He authorized the foundation of the Oblate Sisters of Providence the first religious order of African American women in the United States Whitfield talked about how he would have liked to evangelize the hundreds of thousands of enslaved African Americans in Virginia 25 Pope Gregory XVI in March 1834 appointed Reverend Samuel Eccleston as coadjutor archbishop to assist Whitfield When Whitfield died in October 1834 Eccleston automatically succeeded him as archbishop 26 Eccleston encouraged religious orders to establish mother houses in his diocese particularly those orders that could provide social services to the growing number of Catholic immigrants in the industrializing cities The Sisters of the Visitation increased the number of their academies in the city and the archdiocese the Brothers of St Patrick opened a trade school near Baltimore and the Redemptorists provided services for German speaking immigrants The Brothers of the Christian Schools founded Calvert Hall School in 1845 in Baltimore In 1847 Eccleston was planning to disband the Oblate Sisters of Providence but was dissuaded by Redemptorist Father Thaddeus Anwander 27 St Charles College was established in 1848 in Howard County on land donated by the planter Charles Carroll 28 Between 1837 and 1849 Eccleston held five provincial councils in Baltimore 29 He also started several new parishes during his administration 30 Eccleston died in 1851 1850 to 1866 edit The Vatican continued to erect new dioceses and vicariates out of the Archdiocese of Baltimore through the 19th century as the church evolved and grew in the United States 31 Name of new diocese Date of new diocese Territory taken from archdioceseDiocese of Charleston 1820 North Carolina South Carolina and GeorgiaDiocese of Richmond 1820 Most of VirginiaVicariate Apostolic of Mississippi and Alabama 1822 Mississippi and AlabamaVicariate Apostolic of the Oregon Territory 31 1843 From California to Alaska and from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific OceanDiocese of Richmond 1858 City of AlexandriaDiocese of Wilmington 1868 Delaware and the remaining Virginia countiesFollowing the death of Eccleston Bishop Francis Kenrick of Philadelphia was named the sixth archbishop of Baltimore by Pope Pius IX in 1851 32 He presided over the First Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1852 33 As archbishop Kenrick expanded parochial schools throughout the archdiocese Under his tenure parochial schools were free for all students and were supported directly by the parishes 34 Kenrick died in 1863 The next archbishop of Baltimore was Bishop Martin Spalding from the Diocese of Louisville appointed by Pope Pius IX 35 1866 to 1900 edit In 1866 Spalding founded St Mary s Industrial School in Baltimore a boys reformatory 36 37 Spalding conducted a visitation of the archdiocese during which he reportedly administered confirmation to 8 000 people 38 Spalding recruited priests for the archdiocese from All Hallows College in Ireland and the American College at Louvain in Belgium 30 He also organized the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul as well as the Association of St Joseph a society for the care of impoverished girls 39 After the end of the American Civil War in 1865 Spalding raised 10 000 in the archdiocese for relief efforts in the former Confederate States of America He also took a special interest in the spiritual welfare of the African Americans who had just been freed from slavery Writing to Archbishop John McCloskey Spalding said Four million of these unfortunates are thrown on our charity and they silently but eloquently appeal to us for help 36 He invited Reverend Herbert Vaughan and the Mill Hill Fathers from England to minister exclusively among freedmen In October 1866 Spalding presided over the Second Plenary Council of Baltimore 39 40 After Spalding died in 1871 Pius IX appointed bishop James Bayley from the Diocese of Newark as the next archbishop of Baltimore in 1872 41 He convened the Eighth Provincial Synod in 1875 and enacted new regulations on clerical dress mixed marriages and church music Bayley consecrated the cathedral in 1876 and retired a large amount of archdiocesan debt In May 1877 Pius IX selected Bishop James Gibbons of Richmond as coadjutor archbishop to assist the sick Bayley After Bayley died in October 1877 Gibbons succeeded him as archbishop of Baltimore 42 In 1884 Gibbons founded the House of the Good Shepherd in Baltimore a reformatory for female criminals 43 1900 to 1940 edit After the end of World War I in 1919 Gibbons supported American participation in the new League of Nations He was initially opposed to the women s suffrage movement in the United States However when the nineteenth amendment to the US Constitution passed in 1920 allowing women to vote Gibbons urged women to exercise that right describing it not only as a right but as a strict social duty 44 Gibbons died in 1921Bishop Michael Curley of the Diocese of Saint Augustine was the next archbishop of Baltimore named by Pope Benedict XV in 1921 45 His arrival in his new city was described in the press as one of the greatest welcomes ever tendered a new citizen of Baltimore 46 During his tenure in Baltimore Curley established 66 schools placing the importance of constructing schools over churches 47 In 1926 he declared I defy any system of grammar school education in the United States to prove itself superior to the system that is being maintained in the Archdiocese of Baltimore 48 He also established diocesan offices for Catholic Charities in 1923 and for the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in 1925 48 In 1939 Pope Pius XII erected the Archdiocese of Washington taking the District of Columbia and five nearby Maryland counties from the Archdiocese of Baltimore 49 The pope selected Curley to serve as archbishop of Washington The two archdioceses now shared the same archbishop 50 Curley used the title of Archbishop of Baltimore Washington during this period although the two archdioceses were separate entities 51 1940 to 1989 edit After Curley died in 1947 Pius XII appointed Monsignor Patrick A O Boyle as archbishop of Washington and Bishop Francis Keough of the Diocese of Providence as archbishop of Baltimore 49 50 During the 14 years of Keough s administration the Catholic population of the archdiocese grew from 265 000 to 400 000 Keough dedicated the new Cathedral of Mary Our Queen in Baltimore in 1959 he also built many new schools homes and orphanages 52 In July 1961 Pope John XXIII named Bishop Lawrence Shehan of the Diocese of Bridgeport to assist Keough as coadjutor archbishop When Keough died in December 1961 Shehan automatically succeeded him as archbishop of Baltimore 53 Shehan was a strong supporter of the American Civil Rights movement He banned racial segregation in all of the archdiocesan institutions in 1962 54 and participated in the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom 55 Shehan also maintained good relations with the Jewish and Eastern Orthodox communities in the archdiocese 55 Shehan worked with his friend Harry Lee Doll Episcopal Bishop of Maryland on both civil rights and ecumenical issues Along with the president of St Mary s Seminary and University Shehan and Doll in 1968 founded the Ecumenical Institute at St Mary s 56 Following Shehan s retirement in 1974 Pope Paul VI named Bishop William Borders of the Diocese of Orlando as the 13th archbishop of Baltimore that same year 57 During his 15 year tenure in Baltimore Borders divided the archdiocese into three vicariates and appointed his auxiliary bishops as vicars over them He reorganized the Archdiocesan Central Services naming cabinet level secretaries to carry out the administrative work of the archdiocese 58 Borders clarified and strengthened the role of the archdiocesan pastoral council and combined the board of consultors and the priests senate to form the priests council 59 He initiated a Department of Pastoral Planning and Management an Office of Fund Development and an evangelization effort 58 Instead of residing at an apartment at the Basilica of the Assumption Borders lived alone at the former sexton s lodge 60 61 Borders became what Baltimore Magazine called the king of the soup kitchens While he was archbishop the budget for Catholic Charities grew from 2 5 million a year to 33 million a year and its staff expanded from 200 to over 1 000 62 Borders retired in 1989 1989 to present edit Pope John Paul II appointed Bishop William H Keeler from the Diocese of Harrisburg as the next archbishop of Baltimore in 1989 63 Keeler was responsible for the restoration of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary 64 After Keeler retired in 2006 John Paul II replaced him with Archbishop Edwin O Brien from the Archdiocese for the Military Services USA 65 In 2008 O Brien dedicated the Pope John Paul II Prayer Garden in Baltimore which he called a sanctuary in a suffering city 66 In 2011 he became grand master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem in Rome In 2012 Bishop William E Lori of Bridgeport was appointed archbishop of Baltimore by Pope Benedict XVI In 2019 Lori released The Journey to Racial Justice Repentance Healing and Action The document acknowledged racism in the Catholic Church and suggested measures to combat it That same year Lori instituted an initiative for reporting allegations against any bishop in the archdiocese The policy was drafted by the archdiocesan independent review board As of 2023 Lori is the current archbishop of Baltimore Plenary councils of Baltimore edit The Plenary Councils of Baltimore were three national meetings of American Catholic bishops in the 19th century First Plenary Council 1852 The First Council published a decree requiring priests immigrating to the United States to provide letters of reference from their previous bishops before they could practise ministry in this country The council also passed a requirement that Catholic engaged couples publish marriage banns Second Plenary Council 1866 The Second Council advocated the churching of women a ceremony blessing women after childbirth and setting age 10 as the age for first communion Third Plenary Council 1884 The Third Council set six holy days of obligation for Catholics and appointed a commission to draft a catechism Sexual abuse edit In July 1995 John Merzbacher a teacher at Catholic Community Middle School in south Baltimore received four life sentences after being convicted of raping Elizabeth Ann Murphy at the school in the 1970s 67 At the time prosecutors also found evidence that Marzbacher sexually abused 13 other male and female students when he taught there 68 67 Merzbacher died in prison in May 2023 68 In 2016 the archdiocese confirmed that it had paid a total of 472 000 to settlements to 16 former students of Archbishop Keough High School The plaintiffs claimed to have been sexually abused as children by Reverend A Joseph Maskell from 1967 to 1975 69 70 71 After the archdiocese removed Maskell from ministry in 1994 he fled to Ireland 72 He was never charged with any crimes 73 The archdiocese was featured in the 2017 Netflix documentary The Keepers investigated sexual abuse by clergy at Archbishop Keough High School and the murder of Sister Catherine Cesnik in 1969 A report released by Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro in August 2018 singled out Cardinal William Keeler for criticism When Keeler was archbishop of Baltimore he allowed Reverend Arthur Long to transfer from the Diocese of Harrisburg to the Archdiocese of Baltimore 74 Long had been accused of sexually abusing children during his time in Harrisburg when Keeler was bishop there 74 75 After the grand jury report was released the archdiocese canceled plans to named a new elementary school after Keeler 76 In February 2019 Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh launched an investigation into sexual abuse allegations against the archdiocese 77 Archbishop Lori provided Frosh with over 50 000 pages of internal documents dating back to 1965 78 In March 2019 Lori banned former Auxiliary Bishop Gordon Bennett then residing in the archdiocese from practicing any form of ministry in the archdiocese or the suffragan Diocese of Wheeling Charleston Bennett had been accused of sexual abuse in 2006 79 80 81 In April 2019 the archdiocese added the names of 23 deceased clergy to a list of accused clergy which the archdiocese published in 2002 82 83 Long a Jesuit was among those added to the list 82 83 The State of Maryland investigation concluded in November 2022 84 and its report was released in April 2023 85 86 68 The report named 156 archdiocesan employees and clergy as having credible accusations of sexually abusing more that 600 children between 1940 and 2002 85 68 87 At the same time as the release of the report the Maryland General Assembly passed a bill to end a statute of limitations on abuse related civil lawsuits 88 This bill was signed into law by Governor Wes Moore in April 2023 89 On September 29 2023 the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore in the US filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy to evade large anticipated financial losses in upcoming lawsuits permitted by the Maryland Child Victims Act starting on October 1 90 91 92 93 Episcopate editPrerogative of place edit In 1858 the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith Propaganda Fide with the approval of Pius IX conferred Prerogative of Place on the Archdiocese of Baltimore This decree gave the archbishop of Baltimore precedence over all other American archbishops in councils gatherings and meetings It did not matter if another archbishop had been elevated sooner or had been serving long However a cardinal still had precedence over the archbishop of Baltimore 15 Cathedrals edit The first cathedral for the archdiocese was St Peter s Pro Cathedral which is no longer standing Today unlike all other archdioceses in the United States the Archdiocese of Baltimore has two cathedrals both in Baltimore the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary 94 The archbishop is considered the pastor of both co cathedrals appointing rectors to operate them St Peter s Pro Cathedral edit St Peters served as the base for the archbishop of Baltimore from 1790 to 1821 Since it never met the physical criteria for a proper cathedral and was always considered temporary St Peter s was termed a pro cathedral The building was razed in 1841 Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary edit Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary was constructed between 1806 and 1821 It was the first cathedral in the newly independent United States and is considered the mother church of the country It is a co cathedral of the archdiocese Cathedral of Mary Our Queen edit Mary Our Queen was started in 1954 and completed in 1959 It is a co cathedral of the archdiocese Bishops editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Bishop Carroll lays the cornerstone in 1806 for the Cathedral of the Assumption on Cathedral Hill in Baltimore Prefect Apostolic of the United States edit John Carroll 1784 1789 appointed first diocesan bishop with erection of diocese 95 Bishop of Baltimore edit John Carroll 1789 1808 elevated to Archbishop 95 Archbishops of Baltimore edit John Carroll 1808 1815 Leonard Neale 1815 1817 coadjutor archbishop 1795 1815 Ambrose Marechal 1817 1828 James Whitfield 1828 1834 coadjutor archbishop 1828 Samuel Eccleston 1834 1851 coadjutor archbishop 1834 Francis Patrick Kenrick 1851 1863 Martin John Spalding 1864 1872 James Roosevelt Bayley 1872 1877 James Gibbons 1877 1921 Cardinal in 1886 Michael Joseph Curley 1921 1947 Francis Patrick Keough 1947 1961 Lawrence Shehan 1961 1974 coadjutor archbishop 1961 Cardinal in 1965 William Donald Borders 1974 1989 William Henry Keeler 1989 2007 Cardinal in 1994 Edwin Frederick O Brien 2007 2011 appointed Grand Master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre Cardinal in 2012 William Edward Lori 2012 present 95 Current auxiliary bishops edit Adam J Parker 2017 present Bruce Lewandowski 2020 present 95 Former auxiliary bishops edit Alfred Allen Paul Curtis 1897 1908 previously appointed Bishop of Wilmington Owen Patrick Bernard Corrigan 1908 1929 Thomas Joseph Shahan 1914 1932 John Michael McNamara 1927 1947 appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Washington Lawrence Joseph Shehan 1945 1953 appointed Bishop of Bridgeport later returned as Coadjutor Archbishop of Baltimore and succeeded to see see Archbishops above future Cardinal Jerome Aloysius Daugherty Sebastian 1953 1960 Thomas Austin Murphy 1962 1984 Thomas Joseph Mardaga 1966 1968 appointed Bishop of Wilmington Francis Joseph Gossman 1968 1975 appointed Bishop of Raleigh Philip Francis Murphy 1976 1999 James Francis Stafford 1976 1982 appointed Bishop of Memphis and later Archbishop of Denver President of the Pontifical Council for the Laity and Major Penitentiary of the Apostolic Penitentiary elevated to Cardinal in 1998 William Clifford Newman 1984 2003 John Ricard 1984 1997 appointed Bishop of Pensacola Tallahassee Gordon Dunlap Bennett 1997 2004 appointed Bishop of Mandeville William Francis Malooly 2000 2008 appointed Bishop of Wilmington Mitchell T Rozanski 2004 2014 appointed Bishop of Springfield in Massachusetts Denis J Madden 2005 2016 Mark E Brennan 2017 2019 appointed Bishop of Wheeling Charleston 95 Other diocesan priests who became bishops edit John J Chanche appointed Bishop of Natchez in 1841 Ignatius A Reynolds appointed Bishop of Charleston in 1843 Henry B Coskery appointed Bishop of Portland in 1853 did not take effect William Henry Elder appointed Bishop of Natchez in 1857 and Archbishop of Cincinnati in 1883 Thomas Albert Andrew Becker appointed Bishop of Wilmington in 1868 and Bishop of Savannah in 1886 Thomas Patrick Roger Foley appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Chicago in 1870 John Joseph Keane appointed Bishop of Richmond in 1878 rector of The Catholic University of America in 1886 and Archbishop of Dubuque in 1900 Mark Stanislaus Gross appointed vicar apostolic of North Carolina in 1880 resigned the episcopate c 1881 Jeremiah O Sullivan appointed Bishop of Mobile in 1885 John Samuel Foley appointed Bishop of Detroit in 1888 Placide Louis Chapelle appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Santa Fe in 1891 succeeded to that see in 1894 Archbishop of New Orleans in 1897 and Apostolic Delegate to Cuba and Extraordinary Envoy to Puerto Rico and the Philippines in 1898 Patrick James Donahue appointed Bishop of Wheeling in 1894 William Thomas Russell appointed Bishop of Charleston in 1916 William Joseph Hafey appointed Bishop of Raleigh in 1925 and Bishop of Scranton in 1938 Thomas Joseph Toolen appointed Bishop of Mobile in 1927 Peter Leo Ireton appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Richmond in 1935 and Bishop of Richmond in 1945 John Joyce Russell appointed Bishop of Charleston in 1950 and later Bishop of Richmond in 1958 Philip Matthew Hannan priest of this archdiocese 1939 1947 appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Washington in 1956 and Archbishop of New Orleans in 1965 Michael William Hyle appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Wilmington in 1958 succeeded to that see in 1960 John Selby Spence priest of this archdiocese 1933 1947 appointed auxiliary bishop of Washington in 1964 Edward John Herrmann priest of this archdiocese 1947 appointed auxiliary bishop of Washington in 1966 and Bishop of Columbus in 1973 Victor Benito Galeone appointed Bishop of Saint Augustine in 2001 F Richard Spencer appointed Auxiliary Bishop for the Military Services USA in 2010Priests appointed but never ordained as bishops edit Dominic Laurence Grassel appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of Baltimore in 1793 but the notice arrived after his deathNotable individuals editSister Elizabeth Ann Seton Seton founded the first American congregation of religious sisters the Sisters of Charity of St Joseph in Emmitsburg Maryland in 1809 A year later she opened the first free Catholic school for girls in the United States 96 In 1975 Seton became the first American born person to be canonized a saint Mother Mary Lange Lange opened a free school in her Baltimore home for African American children who were denied access to other schools in the city In 1828 Lange founded the Oblate Sisters of Providence the first sustained religious order for African American women in the United States She also opened what would later become St Frances Academy the first Catholic School for African American children in the United States In 1991 the Catholic Church opened a cause of sainthood for Lange naming her a servant of God 97 Education editMain article List of schools in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of BaltimoreAs of 2023 the Archdiocese of Baltimore had 40 elementary and middle schools and 18 high schools with a total student enrollment of approximately 24 000 98 High schools edit School Location Gender Diocesan or independentArchbishop Curley High School Baltimore Boys DiocesanArchbishop Spalding High School Severn Coed DiocesanBishop Walsh School Cumberland Coed DiocesanCalvert Hall College Baltimore Towson Boys IndependentCristo Rey Jesuit High School Baltimore Coed IndependentLoyola Blakefield Baltimore Towson Boys IndependentMaryvale Preparatory School Brooklandville Girls IndependentMercy High School Baltimore Girls IndependentMount de Sales Academy Baltimore Catonsville Girls IndependentMount Saint Joseph College Baltimore Irvington Boys IndependentNotre Dame Preparatory School Baltimore Towson Girls IndependentOur Lady of Mount Carmel High School Baltimore Coed DiocesanSt Frances Academy Baltimore Coed DiocesanSt John s Catholic Preparatory Buckeystown Frederick County Coed IndependentSt Maria Goretti High School Hagerstown Coed DiocesanSt Mary s High School Annapolis Coed DiocesanThe Catholic High School of Baltimore Baltimore Girls IndependentThe John Carroll School Bel Air Coed IndependentChurches editMain article List of churches in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary old Baltimore Cathedral Cathedral of the Assumption of Mary Baltimore Maryland 99 Basilica of the National Shrine of St Elizabeth Ann Seton Emmitsburg Maryland 100 Media editThe archdiocese began to publish its diocesan newspaper The Baltimore Catholic Review in 1913 as the successor to the earlier diocesan publication The Catholic Mirror published 1833 to 1908 The name has since been shortened to The Catholic Review It changed from weekly to biweekly publication in 2012 and transformed again to a monthly magazine in December 2015 101 Ecclesiastical province editWhen the Archdiocese of Baltimore was erected in 1808 its ecclesiastical province covered the entire nation In 1847 with the erected of the Archdiocese of St Louis the ecclesiastical province of Baltimore shrank 15 It shrank again with the creation of the Archdioceses of Cincinnati New Orleans New York and the Portland in Oregon in 1850 The province currently contains the following suffragan dioceses nbsp Ecclesiastical province of BaltimoreDiocese of Arlington Diocese of Richmond Diocese of Wheeling Charleston Diocese of WilmingtonSee also edit nbsp Catholicism portal nbsp Maryland portalHistorical list of the Catholic bishops of the United States List of the Catholic dioceses of the United States List of Roman Catholic archdioceses by country and continent List of Roman Catholic dioceses alphabetical including archdioceses List of Roman Catholic dioceses structured view including archdioceses List of shrinesReferences edit St Ignatius Feast Day The Archdiocese of Baltimore Archived from the original on October 18 2015 Retrieved February 1 2022 Precedence Catholic Encyclopedia New York City Robert Appleton Company 1911 Retrieved February 26 2016 Kay Liz F July 14 2007 New home for a new archbishop The Baltimore Sun Retrieved February 26 2016 Corrigan G M August 4 2007 Archbishop O Brien to begin stewardship with listening tour The Washington Examiner Knezevich Alison November 15 2016 Baltimore archdiocese pays settlements to a dozen people alleging abuse by late priest The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on August 10 2017 Retrieved August 5 2017 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Baltimore www newadvent org Retrieved October 23 2023 Roark Elisabeth Louise 2003 Artists of Colonial America Greenwood Publishing Group p 78 ISBN 978 0 313 32023 1 Washington Archdiocese Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 22 2023 St Peter s Pro Cathedral Archdiocese of Baltimore Archived from the original on June 20 2018 Retrieved October 16 2018 a b Baltimore Archdiocese Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 22 2023 a b CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA John Carroll www newadvent org Retrieved October 28 2022 Pastoral Letter of 1792 Retrieved October 28 2022 a b Archbishop Leonard Neale Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 23 2023 Archbishop John Carroll www baltimorebasilica org Retrieved October 28 2022 permanent dead link a b c Our History Archdiocese of Baltimore Archived from the original on July 24 2008 Retrieved March 30 2009 Curran Robert Emmett 1993 The Bicentennial History of Georgetown University From Academy to University 1789 1889 Vol 1 First ed Washington D C Georgetown University Press pp 62 63 ISBN 978 0 87840 485 8 OCLC 794228400 Archived from the original on September 9 2018 Retrieved March 15 2018 Melville A M Carroll John New Catholic Encyclopedia via encyclopedia com a b c CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Ambrose Marechal www newadvent org Retrieved October 23 2023 Gleeson David T The Irish in the South 1815 1877 Univ of North Carolina Press 2002 ISBN 9780807875636 p 76 Burns Jeffrey M Skerrett Ellen White Joseph M September 1 2006 Keeping Faith European and Asian Catholic Immigrants Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 9781597529082 Dichtl John R Frontiers of Faith Bringing Catholicism to the West in the Early Republic University Press of Kentucky 2008 ISBN 9780813138817 Sacred Heart Church The Parish with Colonial Roots since 1728 www sacredheartbowie org Archived from the original on March 21 2015 Retrieved August 17 2018 Archbishop James Whitfield Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 23 2023 a b Most Rev James Whitfield Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore Archived from the original on June 28 2010 Retrieved June 11 2007 Clarke Richard Henry Most Rev James Whitfield D D Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States Archbishop Samuel Eccleston P S S Catholic Hierarchy org Morrow Diane Batts The Oblate Sisters of Providence in Ante Bellum Society Uncommon Faithfulness The Black Catholic Experience Mary Shawn Copeland LaReine Marie Mosely Albert J Raboteau eds Orbis Books 2009 ISBN 9781608333585 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Samuel Eccleston www newadvent org Retrieved October 23 2023 Most Rev Samuel Eccleston S S Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore a b Clarke Richard Henry 1872 Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States Vol I New York P O Shea Publisher a b Baltimore Archdiocese Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 22 2023 Archbishop Francis Patrick Kenrick Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 24 2023 Most Rev Francis Patrick Kenrick Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore Archived from the original on September 9 2015 Most Rev Francis Patrick Kenrick Archived from the original on September 9 2015 Archbishop Martin John Spalding Catholic Hierarchy org a b Most Rev Martin John Spalding Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore Archived from the original on October 20 2009 Retrieved December 25 2009 Scharf John 1881 History of Baltimore City and County L H Everts pp 937 938 Retrieved January 11 2011 st mary s industrial school Spalding John Lancaster 1873 The Life of the Most Rev M J Spalding D D New York The Catholic Publication Society a b O Donovan Louis Martin John Spalding Catholic Encyclopedia Davis Cyprian 1986 Black Catholics in Nineteenth Century America U S Catholic Historian 5 1 1 17 ISSN 0735 8318 JSTOR 25153741 Archbishop James Roosevelt Bayley Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 24 2023 Shepherds of the Seminary Seton Hall University The House of the Good Shepherd Glover Park History gloverparkhistory com Retrieved October 24 2023 John Tracy Ellis The Life of James Cardinal Gibbons abridged penelope uchicago edu Retrieved October 25 2023 Archbishop Michael Joseph Curley Catholic Hierarchy org Archbishop Curley Given Big Ovation The Washington Post November 1 1921 Archived from the original on October 2 2012 Retrieved October 25 2023 About Athlone Famous People Athlone ie Archived from the original on July 7 2009 a b Welcome to the Archdiocese of Baltimore Archdiocese of Baltimore Retrieved October 25 2023 a b Most Rev Michael J Curley Archived February 21 2015 at the Wayback Machine Archdiocese of Baltimore Retrieved on November 19 2016 a b Archbishops of the Modern Era 1851 2012 Archived November 20 2016 at the Wayback Machine Archdiocese of Baltimore Retrieved on November 19 2016 Greg Erlandson Editor in Chief Catholic Almanac Our Sunday Visitor Inc Huntington Indiana 2015 pp 374 375 Archbishop Francis P Keough Of Baltimore See Is Dead at 70 Leader of 400 000 Catholics Assumed Post in 1947 Ex Bishop of Providence The New York Times December 9 1961 Lawrence Joseph Cardinal Shehan Catholic Hierarchy www catholic hierarchy org Retrieved October 25 2023 Spalding Thomas 1999 Dissimilitude The Careers of Cardinals Lawrence J Shehan and John J Krol U S Catholic Historian 17 4 53 JSTOR 25154690 a b TIME Magazine Milestones September 10 1984 Somerville Frank P At 25 city s Ecumenical Institute seeks new inspiration broader vision Baltimore Sun Retrieved October 25 2023 Archbishop William Donald Borders Catholic Hierarchy org September 4 2013 Retrieved November 15 2013 a b Archbishops of Baltimore William D Borders 1974 1989 Cathedral of Mary Our Queen Retrieved November 15 2013 Most Rev William D Borders Archdiocese of Baltimore Retrieved November 15 2013 Palmo Rocco October 9 2008 In Charm City Ironman Hits 95 Whispers in the Loggia Retrieved November 15 2013 Kay Liz F Green Erica L April 19 2010 Archbishop Borders dies at age 96 The Baltimore Sun Retrieved November 15 2013 permanent dead link Distinguished Alumnus Award conferral speech given at the 1995 Alumni Reunion Saint Meinrad School of Theology Retrieved November 15 2013 Change For The Diocese The Baltimore Sun July 13 2007 Retrieved March 24 2017 Cardinal William H Keeler 14th Archbishop of Baltimore Dead at Age 86 The Archdiocese of Baltimore May 3 2017 Retrieved July 14 2017 Keeler legacy will continue Baltimore Sun July 13 2007 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Kelly Jacques October 24 2008 An urban sanctuary The Baltimore Sun permanent dead link a b Shatzkin Kate July 22 1995 Ex teacher receives life in rapes of his student Baltimore Sun Retrieved May 15 2023 a b c d Convicted child rapist former Baltimore Catholic school teacher dies in prison Associated Press May 15 2023 Retrieved May 15 2023 Knezevich Alison Baltimore archdiocese pays settlements to a dozen people alleging abuse by late priest Archived from the original on August 10 2017 Retrieved December 12 2017 Nicholson Rebecca July 15 2017 The Keepers I ve dealt with survivors and they re sickened by the church s response The Guardian Knezevich Alison June 6 2017 Keepers priest Maskell spent time in Ireland now under scrutiny baltimoresun com Archived from the original on June 6 2017 Retrieved December 11 2019 Bishop Malooly responds to The Keepers cdow org Retrieved January 22 2018 Simon Carswell June 2 2017 HSE investigates activities of US priest featured in Netflix series The Irish Times Retrieved January 19 2018 a b Wood Pamela Keeler accused of bringing abusive priest to Baltimore archdiocese Archived from the original on August 16 2018 Retrieved August 16 2018 Wood Pamela August 16 2018 Catholic Church No reports of abuse in Maryland by priest accused in Pennsylvania baltimoresun com Retrieved April 9 2020 Amara Kate August 15 2018 New Catholic school in Baltimore will no longer be named for Keeler DePuyt Bruce February 27 2019 Frosh Taps Elizabeth Embry to Probe Sex Abuse Allegations in Baltimore Archdiocese Maryland Matters Retrieved April 12 2023 Knezevich Alison September 24 2021 Years into attorney general investigation of Maryland s Catholic Church abuse survivors wonder where it stands The Baltimore Sun Retrieved April 12 2023 Archbishop Announces Completion of Preliminary Investigation of Allegations Against Bishop Michael Bransfield Imposes Ministerial Restrictions on Bishop Bransfield and Former Baltimore Auxiliary Bishop Gordon Bennett S J Archdiocese of Baltimore March 11 2019 Retrieved April 9 2020 Pitts Jonathan M March 11 2019 Former Baltimore bishop barred from ministering in Catholic archdiocese after allegations of sexual misconduct baltimoresun com Retrieved April 9 2020 Two former bishops have ministry restricted over abuse claims catholicherald co uk Archived from the original on December 12 2019 a b Pitts Jonathan M April 24 2019 Archdiocese of Baltimore discloses the names of 23 deceased clergy accused of child sexual abuse baltimoresun com Retrieved April 9 2020 a b List of Priests and Brothers Accused of Child Sexual Abuse Archdiocese of Baltimore Retrieved April 9 2020 Bowie Liz Prudente Tim November 17 2022 Maryland AG s investigation of pervasive Catholic Church abuse documents 158 priests more than 600 victims The Baltimore Banner Retrieved April 12 2023 a b Attorney General s Report On Child Sex Abuse In The Archdiocese Of Baltimore PDF marylandattorneygeneral gov April 5 2023 Retrieved May 15 2023 Ng Greg April 5 2023 AG to release church sex abuse report into Archdiocese of Baltimore on Wednesday WBAL TV Retrieved May 15 2023 Tebor Celina April 5 2023 Maryland AG report into Archdiocese of Baltimore alleges 156 Catholic clergy members and others abused more than 600 children CNN Retrieved May 15 2023 Report details staggering church sex abuse in Maryland AP NEWS April 5 2023 Retrieved April 11 2023 O Neill Madeleine April 11 2023 Moore signs Child Victims Act making it easier for sex abuse survivors to sue The Daily Record Retrieved April 12 2023 On September 29 2023 the Archdiocese of Baltimore filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code 2023 September 29 2023 Message on bankruptcy 2023 Cite error The named reference Archdiocese of Baltimore Files for Bankruptcy to Evade Sexual Abuse Cases was invoked but never defined see the help page Prudente Tim September 29 2023 Archdiocese of Baltimore files for bankruptcy ahead of expected flood of sex abuse lawsuits The Baltimore Banner Retrieved September 29 2023 Co cathedral a b c d e Archdiocese of Baltimore page on Catholic Hierarchy web site Matysek Jr George October 30 2014 Saints among us The Catholic Review Swift Tim October 16 2019 Meet Mother Mary Lange the namesake of the Archdiocese of Baltimore s newest school The Catholic Review Catholic Schools Archdiocese of Baltimore Retrieved October 22 2023 Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary americasfirstcathedral org Archived from the original on July 3 2018 Retrieved October 6 2014 National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Seton Heritage Retrieved October 6 2014 Catholic Review History The Catholic Review Archived from the original on March 11 2016 Retrieved February 26 2016 External links edit nbsp Media related to Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore at Wikimedia Commons Official website 39 17 38 N 76 37 02 W 39 29389 N 76 61722 W 39 29389 76 61722 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore amp oldid 1198132333 Archbishops of Baltimore, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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